Do We Have to Install Opera One
-
DarthContinent last edited by
@watersotr Another option might be to use a different browser, whether Edge or Chrome or Firefox or some other, until you are able to get the situation with Opera straightened out.
I've done tech support for a couple decades out of the five I've been around so to hopefully clarify some of the helpful info related to @burnout426's reply, the steps described might be easier by opening a Command Prompt in Windows, and then from this page copying the commands and pasting them into the command prompt window, and then when ready hitting Enter to execute them.
For some context, the items in between percent symbols such as %LocalAppData%, %UserProfile%, etc., are sort of generic commands which when typed from your system will open those system folders specific to your Windows installation. These kinds of generic things are also known as environment variables which help software developers among others provide relatively generic means of referencing system-specific things.
That means, for example, %LocalAppData% when pasted into your Command Prompt and hitting Enter will open a Windows Explorer window showing the contents of your C:\Users\<your Windows username>\AppData\Local. The same would occur if you were to paste %LocalAppData% after clicking your Start button (or on older Windows versions into Start => Run).
When running commands there with things after a command to run an EXE file, like --launchopera=0, that serves to specify additional parameters that do other stuff available for typically very specific uses that program offers.
I don't want to derail you from burnout426's explanation in guiding you so please consider my info here as side stuff to hopefully help clear the mud. If there are any specific Windows questions feel free to ask here or separately, I'm familiar with Windows all the way back to 3.1, and MS-DOS as well, so I have a pretty holistic history with its nuances and quirks at the command prompt level.
-
waterSOTR last edited by
After using Opera for 3 or 4 years as the most important of the browsers that I use I have had to uninstall it and quit using it because this new updated version cannot work at all. I never can see more than one tab at a time and have no way to move from that tab to any other, no way to move around at all except to use my Task Manager to shut down and restart.
Too bad, Opera used to be great. Now in attempts to give more it has become far too complicated and specialized. You guys have lost a lot of users...
and all the supposed explanations about how to go back to the former Opera, all of them were super complicated and quite impossible to follow.
in fact, I am not even certain theere written in English.
-
DarthContinent last edited by
@watersotr Perhaps the Opera team should be congratulated for achieving what I suspect is a milestone, if a dubious one, in software development. I think, perhaps, they allowed either a single "rock star" developer, or that person and a gaggle of devotees, to push for what they thought were slick, shiny design and usability changes that turned out to be not so slick and not as usable as they'd hoped.
Whether young or inexperienced or overconfident or a combination, it's entirely possible for people to hyperfocus on some singular goal in development and ultimately neglect the rest, in other words not seeing the forest for the trees, as they say. I think with Opera One they did just that, and however unclear the circumstances may be to mere users choices were made that transcended subjectivity and have proven objectively poor.
Speaking as a longtime IT guy with a background including web and database development, and one having worked with and shaken my head sadly in the aftermath of such people, well-intentioned at best and frightfully egotistical at worst, I can only hope Opera will step back, course correct, and work more closely with their user base to devise a solution that not only deploys the bleeding edge some of their aspirants crave, but also cater to their devoted longtime user base that's stuck with them until recently.
-
canadagoose4everreturns last edited by
@darthcontinent said in Do We Have to Install Opera One: I can only hope Opera will step back, course correct, and work more closely with their user base to devise a solution that not only deploys the bleeding edge some of their aspirants crave, but also cater to their devoted longtime user base that's stuck with them until recently.
Indeed. I tried to follow the directions for going back but sadly my many years on this earth and my declining ability to follow (and understand) directions, I gave up in the end and simply uninstalled Opera altogether. On my Surface I've reverted to Edge. On my MacBook I've reverted to Safari. I fear that my many years with Opera have finally come to an end. I noted your words "frightfully egotistical at worst" and thought that perhaps that might explain this new direction. It's simply not for me. I'll watch from the sidelines.
-
Jacquline last edited by
Yes, it is possible to download an older version of Opera with the former GUI. You can find it on the Opera website's downloads page. Once you have downloaded the installer, you can run it to install the older version of Opera. However, please note that Opera will automatically update itself to the latest version unless you disable automatic updates. To disable automatic updates, you can open Opera and go to Opera > Settings > Advanced > Update. Uncheck the box next to Automatically check for updates and click OK.
-
canadagoose4everreturns last edited by canadagoose4everreturns
@jacquline Thanks for this information, but which link on the downloads page? Opera is making it very difficult for the user to know which version is which. Also: if you do check the box to prevent automatic updates, does that mean you will no longer receive security updates as well (which would put you at risk)?
-
leocg Moderator Volunteer last edited by
@canadagoose4everreturns There is no option to block automatic updates, what people do is to use some workarounds to avoid them.
And, yes, if you block updates then you will no longer get security updates unless you do them manually.
-
canadagoose4everreturns last edited by
@leocg Okay, thanks, Leo. You've actually told this to me before (my memory is lousy these days). It really becomes a case of: am I willing to go with Opera One or sit on the sidelines and wait to see what takes place. I have an older Lenovo Thinkpad that I might try with Opera One but I don't want to put it on my new Surface. Again, thanks for your patience since you probably "do" remember being down this road with me before.
-
waterSOTR last edited by
yeah. I tried to follow the directions to do all of that.
now I have given up on Opera and went back to Firefox and Brave because I will never do Edge or any Microsoft program if I can help it. -
waterSOTR last edited by
none of that was on the Opera full screen page. no way at all off that except to use Task Manager to shut it all down... so I lost everything I had been working on in other tabs...
-
waterSOTR last edited by
what is GUI?
your directions about disabling Opera so it cannot force me back to the new version later - those directions did not work. and besides as others have said, that would mean my opera is putting me at risk because there would be no security updates.Opera blew it with this new version.
-
DarthContinent last edited by
@watersotr GUI = Graphical User Interface.
@burnout426's directions worked fine for me, but if you're completely new to using the command prompt it may not work out straight away, there are a few Windows-specific conventions that help to be aware of there.
I'm with you regarding the security aspect. Though I was able to run through the steps to fall back to the pre Opera One version, that means I'm basically stuck, and I won't upgrade unless Opera specifically offers an option to preserve the previous versions GUI aspects which I and so many others were very comfortable with.
-
waterSOTR last edited by
@darthcontinent i
thank you for that. knowing that GIU stands for "Graphical User Interface" doesn't tell me a thing about what it is.but until Opera fixes the security problem for those of us who wish to stick with one of the older versions I am not interested, though I liked and trusted Opera more than any of the other browsers. On top of that, I have no way of knowing which version I had and if I were to go back I would want that specific version because I had figured it all out...
as you can problem tell, I am slow when it comes to tech stuff, easily frustrated.
on the other hand I have survived living in caves, have worked with street gangs and addicts, directed a substance abuse program, mined for gemstones all over this nation, cut and polished gemstones set them and did repairs in both gold and sterling silver, as well as fabricating new pieces, and have cooked in restaurants. I used those talents to put myself through school, earning an N.D. degree, and to support my work in the health care field for over 35 years, mostly at free clinics, etc etc.
I taught myself to use computers (without ever playing a game on one) about 30 years ago and cannot understand the lingo or keep up with any of the modernization.
-
canadagoose4everreturns last edited by canadagoose4everreturns
@watersotr Permit me to congratulate you on your hard-won achievements in life. It sounds like you are a very industrious worker and one who cares about others and as such I have great respect for what you have accomplished. I wouldn't worry too much about your belief that you can't keep up with tech lingo and the rapid changes in technology and computer software; welcome to the club. My 89 year old sister still struggles to use her iPad but she doesn't give up and I admire her for it. It is a shame that Opera has not given options for its users in terms of those who wish to remain with the previous version being allowed to do so. But that doesn't appear to be the case and therefore to remain safe online we're going to need to make a decision: upgrade to Opera One or install a different browser that is closer to what Opera once was (i.e. Vivaldi, Brave or even Firefox). Good luck.
-
canadagoose4everreturns last edited by
@leocg I don't suppose there is any chance the old version can be forked similar to what was done in Firefox (i.e. Palefox, Waterfox etc), right? Opera is not open source so I guess its users are stuck with Opera One if they wish to remain with the browser. Yes?